My group does not operate as a centre for statistics, but it's fairly representative. I'm talking about my group, as well as other communities working on breast implant diseases and BIA-ALCL in general.
Transgender women are probably the most psychologically ill-treated group of patients, and they also experience the most medical cognitive dissonance. That's because they are women who frequently take hormones to achieve what they are looking for in terms of identity. It involves a medical implant, a foreign body. Any foreign body can have consequences. Transgender women who have breast implants are therefore experiencing systemic symptoms related to the implant surgery, like women who are not transgender.
The problem is that if they ask their health professionals about it, as we have all done, most of the time they will be told that their problem is hormone related. They are told that it's caused by something they did to their body. And yet, transgender women who have decided to have their breast implants removed, had their symptoms resolve after a while, as they do for other women.
I personally don't see any difference between transgender and non-transgender women: with breast implants, they both experience the same systemic problems, and the same cases of breast implant-associated anaplastic large cell lymphoma.